May winds down - Race on for new British PM as Brexit crisis lingers on

British Prime Minister Theresa May reacts as she turns away after making a speech in the street outside 10 Downing Street in London, England, yesterday. Theresa May says she’ll quit as UK Conservative leader on June 7, sparking a contest for Britain’s next prime minister.

LONDON (AP):

Theresa May ended her failed three-year quest to lead Britain out of the European Union yesterday, announcing that she will step down as Conservative Party leader June 7 and triggering a contest to choose a new prime minister who will try to complete Brexit.

“I have done my best,” May said in a speech outside 10 Downing Street, as close aides and her husband Philip looked on, before acknowledging that it was not good enough.

Concluding her remarks, she struggled to contain her emotions and her voice broke as she expressed “enduring gratitude to have had the opportunity to serve the country I love”.

Then she turned and strode through the famous black door of No. 10.

May will stay on as a caretaker prime minister until the new leader is chosen, a process the Conservatives aim to complete by late July. The new party leader will become prime minister without the need for a general election.

She became prime minister the month after the UK voted in June 2016 to leave the European Union, and her premiership has been consumed by the attempt to deliver on that verdict.

May was brought down by Brexit, but her nemesis wasn’t the EU, with which she successfully struck a divorce deal.

She was felled by her own Conservative Party, which refused to accept it. The plan was defeated three times in Parliament, rejected both by pro-EU opposition lawmakers and by Brexit-supporting Conservatives who thought it kept Britain too closely bound to the bloc.

Many Conservative lawmakers came to see May as an obstacle and blamed her for the UK’s failure to leave the EU on the scheduled date of March 29. The bloc has extended that deadline until October 31 in hope Britain’s politicians can break their political deadlock.

BREAKING POINT

The pressure on May reached breaking point this week as House of Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom quit and several Cabinet colleagues rejected the bill she planned to put before Parliament in a fourth attempt to secure lawmakers’ backing for her Brexit blueprint.

In her farewell speech, May defended her record, saying she had “negotiated the terms of our exit and a new relationship with our closest neighbours that protects jobs, our security and our Union.

“I have done everything I can to convince MPs to back that deal,” she said. “Sadly, I have not been able to do so.”

“It is now clear to me that it is in the best interests of the country for a new prime minister to lead that effort,” she added.

Multiple contenders are already jockeying to replace her in a contest that will see a new leader chosen by Conservative lawmakers and party members. The early front-runner is Boris Johnson, a former foreign secretary and strong champion of Brexit. Other contenders are likely to include Leadsom, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and former Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab.